Close X
Monday, September 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mom convicted of daughter's murder loses appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2021 12:46 PM
  • Mom convicted of daughter's murder loses appeal

VANCOUVER - The B.C. Court of Appeal has unanimously dismissed the case of a mother found guilty of suffocating her eight-year-old daughter.

Surrey, B.C., resident Lisa Batstone was convicted of second-degree murder for smothering her daughter, Teagan, in December 2014.

Batstone, who was 41 at the time, was sentenced in 2019 to life in prison with no parole eligibility for 15 years.

She appealed her conviction and sentence after her trial, arguing her mental health issues were not given adequate weight and the judge was wrong to find she had the intent to kill.

In rejecting Batstone's appeal, Justice Richard Goepel said in the ruling released Friday that although the trial judge made three errors in her decision, all were harmless and didn't impact the conclusion that the appellant had the "requisite intent."

Batstone was described in her original trial as "deeply devoted to Teagan" and to the girl's well-being, but she remained bitter over her divorce and blamed her ex-husband for what she believed were her daughter's "separation anxiety and other struggles."

Lawyers for Batstone had argued for a manslaughter conviction, but the three-judge panel upheld the lower court decision, ruling "there is nothing in the evidence that suggested that the accused’s mental disorders prevented her from forming the subjective intent to kill her daughter."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

More Canadians say worst of COVID-19 yet to come

More Canadians say worst of COVID-19 yet to come
Fifty-four per cent of respondents to an online survey by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies say the worst of the COVID-19 crisis is already over, compared with 63 per cent who believed so in a survey last month.

More Canadians say worst of COVID-19 yet to come

Results of pandemic election won't be immediate

Results of pandemic election won't be immediate
They're part of a process Elections Canada has devised to ensure an election can be conducted safely and produce trustworthy results while the country remains in the grip of COVID-19.

Results of pandemic election won't be immediate

Long-term care improvements could top $13B

Long-term care improvements could top $13B
A report published this morning by parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux estimates ending wait lists, increasing staff pay and benefits, providing more hours of care each day and expanding home care could cost around $13.7 billion.

Long-term care improvements could top $13B

Canada, U.S. can't share firefighters

Canada, U.S. can't share firefighters
Last year, Canada sent 529 front-line crew members, 62 supervisory teams and a number of aircraft to help the U.S. battle rampant wildfires in California and the Pacific Northwest.

Canada, U.S. can't share firefighters

Vancouver home sales down 11.6% from June: REBGV

Vancouver home sales down 11.6% from June: REBGV
The B.C. board says home sales in the region totalled 3,326 last month, a 6.3 per cent increase from the 3,128 sales recorded last July and an 11.6 per cent drop from the 3,762 homes sold in June.

Vancouver home sales down 11.6% from June: REBGV

Next step of Meng extradition case set to begin

Next step of Meng extradition case set to begin
Legal arguments are expected over the next few weeks from the Department of Justice and Meng's lawyers over whether she should be extradited to the United States.

Next step of Meng extradition case set to begin